SEATTLE -- Kathleen Brose never understood why the Seattle School Board wanted to use race in assigning students to public high schools, especially when students from so many backgrounds already attended each. The Supreme Court's 5-4 ruling rejecting Seattle's assignment program and another in Louisville, Ky., vindicated her concerns, Brose said Thursday. The court held that although fixing the effects of past discrimination is a legitimate reason to consider race, Seattle's schools were never segregated by law or subject to court-ordered desegregation. The majority also took issue with Seattle's "crude" definition of diversity, in which students were classified only as White or non-White. "It's been a long seven years," Brose, the president of Parents Involved in Community Schools, said as she teared up during a news conference. "I don't want any other parent to go through this again. "It shouldn't matter what your skin color is, your income or your disabilities. Public schools are for all of us. If this nation is going to move beyond race, we have to stop using race as part of important decisions." Brose, who is White, sued seven years ago, after her daughter failed to get into highly regarded Ballard High or her other two top choices because of her skin color. The girl wound up commuting across town to attend Ingraham High School in the city's north end, then transferred when a new high school opened at Seattle Center. In Seattle, incoming freshmen can choose which of the city's 10 high schools they wish to attend. If too many students apply to one school, the district uses tiebreakers to decide who gets in. The first is whether the student already has a sibling at the school. It's the second tiebreaker -- race -- that was at issue, even though the district stopped using it in 2002 during litigation in the case. In schools that were considered "racially imbalanced," preference was given to students who would bring the school closer to the district-wide ratio of Whites to non-Whites, 40 percent to 60 percent. It helped Whites get into predominantly minority schools, and vice versa. The parents group noted that under the Seattle School District's program, a school that was 25 percent White, 25 percent Black, 25 percent Asian and 25 percent Hispanic would be considered racially imbalanced. "We've never said we didn't like diversity," Brose said. "We're against discrimination. ... There are just other things they can do without discriminating." Harry Korrell, a lawyer for Parents Involved, called the decision a "sweeping victory." Asked how school districts could ensure racial balance without considering race, he said, "I don't think the government gets to decide what the right racial mix is." School district officials focused on Justice Anthony Kennedy's concurrence to the opinion offered by the court's four more conservative members. The deciding vote, Kennedy left the door open for the limited consideration of race to achieve diversity in schools, specifically suggesting that districts can draw attendance zones, strategically locate new schools, recruit students and teachers in a targeted fashion, and take other such measures to encourage diversity. "We are disappointed," said Superintendent Raj Manhas. But, he added, "We take heart from the court's affirmation of the broader goal ... to offer racially and ethnically diverse student bodies." The school district did not immediately return a call seeking comment, but scheduled a morning news conference to discuss the ruling. District attorneys have noted that since the district stopped using the tiebreaker, Ballard High has jumped from 57 percent White to 63 percent White. One of the most popular schools in the city's south end, Franklin High, saw its minority population increase by 8 percentage points. A U.S. district judge in Seattle and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Seattle's practice, finding that the district "has a compelling interest in securing the educational and social benefits of racial (and ethnic) diversity." --The Associated Press

Recently Published by The Skanner News

Analysis: Trump sees no constraint on his authority to use what he calls the “unlimited power” of the military even against U.S. citizens but military leaders believe that active-duty troops, trained to hunt and kill an enemy, should be used only in the most extreme emergency

In Washington, city workers and volunteers painted “Black Lives Matter” in enormous yellow letters on the street leading to the White House on Friday in a sign of local leaders’ embrace of the protest movement.